Firestick. William W. Johnstone
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“If you say so,” Firestick allowed, deciding he’d done enough poking with the needle. “But that obviously ain’t the case with Tolsvord and his wife. The way she’s puttin’ the spurs to him where her loser nephews are concerned has got to go against his grain. Yet he keeps lettin’ her get away with it.”
“You think holdin’ this bunch behind bars for a spell is gonna change anything?”
“I have my doubts. But that don’t change my mind none.”
Moosejaw’s mouth spread in a sly grin. “Maybe Mrs. Tolsvord will show up and try puttin’ the spurs to you about her nephews and their buddy, Newt.”
“She could try.” Firestick scoffed. “All she’ll accomplish would be goin’ away with some dulled-up spurs if she does.”
Further discussion of the matter was interrupted by the entrance of a man who strode in confidently and then pressed the door closed behind him. He was an elderly gent, average-sized, still carrying himself straight and strong. He had a neatly trimmed mustache, bone-white in color, that contrasted with a set of unruly eyebrows, also white. Beneath the brows, a pair of alert, quick-moving dark eyes swept back and forth between the two lawmen.
“Heard talk you’d taken in some some new boarders,” he announced. “Expected you’d be wantin’ me to babysit, so I figured I’d go ahead and save you the trouble of havin’ to come fetch me.”
“Well, now. That’s right prompt and thoughtful of you, Sam,” said Firestick. “Indeed, we’ll be needin’ your services for tonight and about three more. You available for the duration?”
The elderly gent nodded. “Got nothing better to do. You know my requirements. ’S’long as you hold up your end, I’ll hold up mine.”
Sam Duvall was a former New York City constable, a widower with a touch of tuberculosis who’d come West for his health after the passing of his wife. He lived alone in a small cabin on the south side of town. When Buffalo Peak first decided it needed a town marshal, Sam had been approached, due to his background in law enforcement. Though grateful for the offer, he’d turned it down, citing his age and health. Once Firestick and his pals signed on, however, they approached him with a different proposition. For occasions when there were prisoners in the lockup overnight, they asked him to serve as jailer. Sam, who admitted to being bored much of the time by the quiet and solitude of his lifestyle, had jumped at the chance.
The “requirements” Sam spoke of for taking the job were pretty simple and had nothing to do with monetary payment. He asked only for supper and breakfast to be served from the kitchen of the Mallory Hotel, the makings for plenty of coffee to drink in between, and the allowance for his dog, Shield, to accompany him during his stay.
“Sounds like a done deal to me,” said Firestick. “Got Shield with you?”
“As always. He’s waiting outside.”
“Well, bring him on in whenever you’re ready. There’s plenty of coffee fixin’s, you know where everything is. We’ll see to gettin’ some supper sent over from the Mallory.”
“What about supper for the prisoners?” Sam asked.
“They likely ain’t in no mood to eat right away,” said Moosejaw. “They’re sufferin’ the effects of hangovers and from receivin’ a well-deserved thumpin’.”
“I’m comin’ back for the late-duty turn. I’ll see to gettin’ ’em some vittles if they’re up for anything then,” Firestick said.
Since the three former mountain men also had a ranch to run in addition to their lawmen obligations, the way they worked it out in the normal course of things was to have at least one of them present in town and at least one at the ranch during the daytime hours. Each evening, they took supper together at the Double M, using that opportunity to bring one another up to date on anything pertinent and discuss it accordingly. Then, after supper, one of them would return to town for a “late duty” tour to make sure everything was in order, that all the shop doors that were supposed to be locked were secure, and that things were suitably quieting down.
“Do you know who it is we’ve got behind bars?” Moosejaw asked Sam.
“A whole lot of nothing, the way I heard—the Dunlap brothers and that little runt who follows ’em around. Willoughby or some such?”
“Woolsey,” Firestick said. “You may have got the name wrong, but the rest of what you said was dead-on—the three of ’em don’t amount to a hill of beans. They can be ornery and troublesome, though, so don’t take no guff off of ’em.”
“That’ll be the day,” Sam muttered.
Rubbing his ample stomach, Moosejaw said, “I’ll tell you something else he got dead-on. All this talk about supper is makin’ me hungry. I didn’t realize how late it was gettin’. We’d best get headed out to the ranch before long, Firestick, or Miss Victoria will be servin’ us a cold supper by the time we get there.”
“Like that’d slow you down any from puttin’ away a pile of it,” said Firestick. “But you ain’t wrong, it’s time to get headed that way. We’ll stop by the hotel and arrange for your supper to be sent over, Sam. Then I’ll see you again a little later on.”
“Me and Shield will be lookin’ for you. I’ll have a pot of coffee brewed.”
CHAPTER 7
Cleve Boynton was in no hurry to get back to the Box T.
Oh, he was anxious enough to crawl into his bunk and grab himself a stretch of shut-eye at the end of a long day, that much was true. But the part that would have to come beforehand—him telling Boss Tolsvord about how Marshal Firestick had the Dunlaps and Woolsey locked up in jail and wasn’t planning on releasing them until he’d kept them for a spell and received a stiff fine—that was the part he was in no hurry for. Tolsvord was bound to holler like a scalded dog.
Not that he’d be hollering at Boynton, exactly, but the ramrod would have to stand there and listen to it all the same. And the hardest part of all would be acting like he had a shred of sympathy for the three damn fools, when all the while he actually didn’t blame the marshal for throwing those bumbling clowns in the clink. He wouldn’t even mind too much if Firestick kept them there for good.
Boynton couldn’t let on about such feelings, of course. And, while it was true the trio was half-assed, at best, when it came to doing any work around the ranch, they were still three sets of hands he’d have to get by without in the days to come. But Boynton could shift the rest of the crew around in order to manage that. All he really had to get past was breaking the news to Tolsvord.
For the sake of putting off this unenviable yet inevitable task, Boynton had hung around town after leaving the jail, until dusk was starting to settle in. Since the Box T was a couple hours’ ride from Buffalo Peak, that meant it would be dark by the time he made it back. But that was no problem; he had a trusty horse under him, and they both knew the way well enough, even in the dark.
For a little while, as he rode along, Boynton toyed with the hope that maybe he’d find Tolsvord turned in early so he could hold off telling him anything until tomorrow.